Crete is one
of the 13 regions of Greece. It is the
biggest island in Greece and the second
biggest (after Cyprus) of the East
Mediterranean. It lies at the southern end
of the Aegean Sea and covers an area of
8,336 km˛. Its population is around 800,000
people (as of 2000). The island is 260 km
long and varies in width from 60 km
(measured from the Dion cape to the Lithinon
cape), to only 12 km at the Isthmus of
Ierapetra in eastern Crete. The coast is
deeply indented, giving Crete over 1,000 km
of shoreline.
The island is extremely mountainous and is
defined by a high mountain range crossing it
from West to East, formed by three different
groups of mountains. These are:
* the White Mountains or Lefka Ori (up to
2,452 m high);
* the Idi range (Psiloritis (35.18° N 24.82°
E) 2,456 m);
* the Dikti mountains (up to 2,148 m high)
These mountains gifted Crete with fertile
plateaus like Lasithi, Omalos and Nidha,
caves like Diktaion and Idaion cave, and
gorges like the famous Gorge of Samaria
Climate
Crete straddles two climatic zones, the
Mediterranean and the North African, mainly
falling within the former. As such, the
climate in Crete is primarily temperate. The
atmosphere can be quite humid, depending on
the proximity to the sea. The winter is
fairly mild. Snow fall is practically
unknown to the plains, but quite frequent in
the mountains. During summer, average
temperatures are in the high 20's-low 30's
(Celsius). The exception can be the south
coast, including the Messara plain and
Asterousia mountains, which fall in the
North African climatic zone and thus enjoys
significantly more sunny days and high
temperatures during the summer. Probably the
best time to visit Crete is spring and
autumn.
Economy
The economy of Crete, which was mainly based
on farming, started changing visibly during
the 1970s. While there is still an emphasis
on farming and stock breeding, due to the
climate and the terrain of the island, there
is a drop in manufacturing and a big
increase on the services industry (mainly
tourism related). All three sectors of the
Cretan economy (agriculture,
processing-packaging, services), are
directly connected and interdependent. Crete
has an average per capita income which is
close to 100% of the Greek average.
Unemployment is at approximately 4%, half of
that of Greece.
The island has three significant airports,
Nikos Kazantzakis at Heraklion, the military
airport Daskalogiannis at Chania and a new
public airport in Sitia.
Cities
Crete's principal cities are:
* Heraklion (Iraklion or Candia) (275,000
inhabitants)
* Chania (Haniá) (139,000 inhabitants)
* Rethimno (69,290 inhabitants)
* Ierapetra (21,025 inhabitants)
* Agios Nikolaos (19,000 inhabitants)
* Sitia (9,075 inhabitants)